creating an enhanced service system through dmc-ods ......the state’s drug medi-cal organized...
TRANSCRIPT
Creating an Enhanced Service
System through DMC-ODS:
Riverside County
March 2019
Outline
• Background
• Previous System of Care
• Conceptual Elements of System Redesign
• New System Roll Out
• Lessons Learned
• Story Telling with Data
• Next Steps
Background
What is DMC-ODS?
• The DMC-ODS is a pilot program to test a new paradigm
for the organized delivery of healthcare services for
Medicaid eligible individuals with a SUD. The DMC-ODS
will demonstrate how organized substance use disorder
care increases the success of DMC beneficiaries while
decreasing other system healthcare costs.
Essential Elements of DMC-ODS
• Provision of a continuum of care based on ASAM Criteria
• Increased local control & accountability
• Greater administrative oversight
• Creates utilization controls to improve care and efficient
use of resources.
• Utilization of EPB in SUD treatment
• Increased coordination with other systems of care
Waiver History
• First submitted to CMS on November 21, 2014• California DHCS announced federal approval of
the State’s Drug Medi-Cal Organized Delivery System (DMC-ODS) on August 14, 2015
• Counties have option to opt-in or opt-out of the DMC-ODS
• Riverside and San Mateo Counties were first counties in California to go live with their plans –February 1, 2017
Previous System of Care
Riverside County System of Care
• 10 County operated Substance Abuse clinics providing
prevention, outpatient, and intensive outpatient services
• 16 Contracted Providers located at 50+ sites around the
County that provide the balance of service
– Outpatient/Intensive Outpatient
– Residential
– Withdrawal Management
– NTP/OTP
Services covered previously under
State Plan Amendment
• Services reimbursable under DMC
– Outpatient Drug Free (ODF) – group counseling
– Intensive Outpatient (IOT) – group counseling
– NTP (methadone only)
– Perinatal Residential
– Individual Counseling Sessions (ODF & IOT)
• Crisis Intervention
• Collateral services
• Other Individual Counseling sessions were not covered
Services covered previously under
State Plan Amendment
• Services not reimbursable under DMC and billed to
SAPT Block Grant
– Non-perinatal residential (adult and adolescent)
– Medication Assisted Treatment (MAT)
– Case Management
– Individual Counseling Sessions (ODF and IOT) other than crisis
intervention and collateral sessions
• Family sessions
• Weekly individual sessions
– Withdrawal Management (Detox)
Other limitations with
State Plan Amendment
• Wait time for county funded residential beds anywhere
from 3 weeks to 6 months
• SAPT-BG limited the number of available county funded
beds
• Unable to provide therapy with Clinical Therapist
• Aftercare not available
Conceptual Elements of
System Redesign
New Elements Reimbursable Under
DMC-ODS Waiver
• Multiple Levels of Residential Care based on ASAM
• Multiple Levels of Withdrawal Management based on ASAM
• Multiple Levels of Outpatient Care based on ASAM
• Case Management Services
• Recovery Services (Aftercare)
• Physician Consultations
• Medication Assisted Treatment
• OTP/NTP – expanded drug selection
– Buprenorphine
– Naloxone
– Disulfiram
– Methadone
ASAM Levels of Care
Level of Care Description
0.5 Early Intervention
1.0 Outpatient
2.1 Intensive Outpatient
2.5 Partial Hospitalization
3.1 Low Intensity Residential (Clinically Managed)
3.3 Med. Intensity Residential (Population Specific; Clinically Managed)
3.5 High Intensity Residential (Clinically Managed)
OTP Opiate Treatment Program (formerly NTP)
ASAM Levels of Care (cont.)
Level of Care Description
3.7 Intensive Inpatient Services (Medically Monitored)
4.0 Intensive Inpatient Services (Medically Managed)
1.0-WM Ambulatory Withdrawal Management (w/o on-site monitoring)
2.0-WM Ambulatory Withdrawal Management (with on-site monitoring)
3.2-WM Clinically Managed Residential Withdrawal Management
3.7-WM Medically Monitored Inpatient Withdrawal Management
4.0-WM Medically Managed Inpatient Withdrawal Management
Minimal Requirements for
DMC-ODS Counties
Service Required
Early Intervention Level 0.5
Outpatient Level 1.0 and Level 2.1
Residential At least one ASAM level of services initially (3.1, 3.3, or 3.5)
NTP Required (includes 4 drug options)
Withdrawal Management
At least one level of service
Recovery Services
Case Management
PhysicianConsultation
Additional Conceptual Elements
• 24-hour access hotline (required by waiver)
• Level of Care determined by ASAM
• Residential Placements controlled by County instead of providers
• Creation of ASAM Screening Tools
• Countywide Care Coordination Team to provide case management for
residential and high risk consumers
• Peer and Clinical Therapist Involvement
• Provider involvement throughout the design process
• Service delivery in schools (prevention & treatment)
Plan Development
• Behavioral Health Commission
• Interdisciplinary Care Team
• Youth Interagency Committee
• Contract Provider & Community Stakeholders
• Strategic Partner Committees (Residential, Outpatient, Adolescent
Services, MAT/OTP)
• Internal Readiness Committee (Fiscal, Billing, EHR, Contracts,
Program, QI, Compliance)
Behavioral Health Commission
MH Substance Use Program
Community Sub-Committees
Children's Committee
Adult System of Care Committee
Older Adult System of Care
Committee
Housing Committee
Criminal Justice Committee
Veterans Committee
Contracted Providers
Criminal Justice
County Clinics
YouthInteragency Committee
Interdisciplinary Care Team (ICT)
Inland Empire Health Plan
(IEHP)
Kaiser Permanente
Molina Health Care
Community Health Clinics
Substance Use Community Access Referral Evaluation
& Support Line (SU CARES)
• 24 Hour informational line as required by Waiver
• This team is responsible for all residential withdrawal
management and residential treatment placement in
County
• Calls initially answered by clerical staff which gather
demographic information about client and check for Medi-
Cal Availability. Call then passed on to Counselor for
ASAM Screening and placement
SU CARES (cont.)
• System was tested out for a full year before going live with
clients referred from County Managed Care Plan – Inland
Empire Health Plan (IEHP)
• Original team consisted of Supervisor, one clerical staff,
and 2 counselors
SU CARES Volume by Month Beta Test
8 16 23 18 19 33 40 37 41 36 324643 39
95
69
102 101
75
9385
75 7460
130
104114 108
140
168 170
148
172160 161
239
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Jan Feb Mar Apr May June July Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
SU CARES Referrals Monthly Totals 2014 2015 2016
Care Coordination Teams
• Case management team assigned to consumers placed in
residential withdrawal management and residential
treatment. Case managers follow clients through entire
residential episode
• Originally had 3 CCT teams and 1 START team located in
3 distinct geographic regions of County
Additional Preparations
• Development of ASAM screening tools (adult and
adolescent)
• 4 levels of ASAM training offered to counseling staff: (A,
B, C, Continuum of Care)
• Training on Evidence Based Practices for counseling staff:
MI, CBT, Relapse Prevention
• EBP Curriculum training for counseling staff: Living in
Balance, Matrix (Adult & Adolescent), CBT for PTSD,
Coping with Stress: Teens and Trauma
Services Directly in Schools
• Idea was to be able to provide services for high risk youth
directly at school sites
• Created MOU with SELPA – this allowed us to be active in
any district serviced by SELPA
• Providing Indicated Prevention Services (funded through
SAPT-BG) and Treatment Services (DMC-ODS) as a
satellite service from closest county operated SAPT clinic;
same counselor provides both services
• Currently active in 4 districts and 8 schools
New System Rollout
New System Rollout
• System live at 7:00 am on February 1, 2017. Riverside and Santa
Clara County were the first in California to roll-out waiver. New
contracts started on that day; Riverside County rolled out all services
on that day
• County SAPT program had 132 FTEs in April 2015 and 218 FTEs on
February 1, 2017 (approximately 68 positions unfilled – 150 working)
Medical Necessity
• One of biggest challenges of rollout centered on the
paradigm shift that treatment level of care should be
based on medical necessity
• Lots of pushback from courts, probation, DPSS, etc. that
had mandated clients receive a specific regiment of
treatment
• Great effort launched to prepare and educate our
community partners of this change, which made the
transition much smoother
SU CARES Line Challenges
Initial Staffing Inadequate for
SU CARES Line
• Were not prepared for high number of calls into system
– Needed to bring in CCT Team in to assist with calls
– Needed to use clinic personnel from around the county to assist
with calls as well
• Staffing of SU CARES line now includes 3 clerical and 7
counselors along with supervisor
SAPT Care Coordination Team
Changes and Caseloads
• Mid-County CCT Dissolved
• Desert CCT: Blythe Addition, START
• Riverside CCT Increase Staffing
• Adolescent Specific County Wide
• 93% Medi-Cal (DMC)
• Increased Consumer
Interaction
• Less Drive Time
• Increased Engagement
Other Challenges
• Keeping up with staffing - difficulty in increasing workforce
and training workforce
• 88 hours training every 6 month for the first 18 months
that began 6 month before live date
• Staff mastery of the ASAM has been one of the more
challenging components
• Also, trying to get staff to change their concept of
treatment from a non-medical one to one based on an
ASAM standpoint
Lessons Learned
Contingency Plan
• Don’t get caught off-guard – plan for contingency
operations
– Electronic documents should be available as printed versions
– Computer systems crash – just plan on that happening
• Plan on having staffing snafus
Document Content of all Calls
• Calls into SU CARES line should be logged into EHR and
call content recorded
• This is necessary since sometimes it takes several calls to
gather all information on client and previous counselor
may not be available at time of call back
• Also important if call is accidentally dropped
• This way everyone that interacts with consumer has all
pertinent information available
Call Center Should Have
Library of Local Resources
• Many of calls coming in to SU CARES line are for information.
• Having library of local resources makes it easy to connect consumers
with services
• Often, consumers going into residential treatment need to have
certain issues addressed before treatment - local resource library
helps with this
• Also important to have contact information for SUD offices of other
counties in area – especially important when consumers present with
out-of-county Medi-Cal coverage
Wait Times Reduced or Eliminated
• Once County took over bed placement for residential and
withdrawal management services, providers committed to
providing more beds and wait time for placement were
reduced significantly or eliminated all together
• Residential beds for adolescents and beds for withdrawal
management are scarce, so wait times can be around 2
weeks
• Many clients can be placed into a residential bed on same
day or next day
Story Telling with Data
SU CARES Line Monthly Call Volume
January 2017 – June 2018
370
3301
38613549
3817
33392917
31202911
41213882
3349 3419
2831 2987 30233447 3627
710
310
287
259
207
146118
108
262
274
390 275
259198 186
10475
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
5000
Jan-17 Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
Incomplete
Completed
Residential Active Clients by Month
367
410
484
535516
554 556 570 561590
609 609625 632
584615 620
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
Residential 367 410 484 535 516 554 556 570 561 590 609 609 625 632 584 615 620
Residential Active Clients by Month
WM Active Clients by Month
86
117 119128
120
136
116
148 148
164
184
208 205
190
143
155 158
0
50
100
150
200
250
Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
Detox
RS Active Clients by Month
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
6166
49
60
97
111108
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
Recovery Services
OT and OTP Active Clients
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
1400
1600
Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
Outpatient 1029 1128 1135 1101 1057 1020 1097 1040 1023 986 1031 1038 991 1033 1003 1073 1048
NTP 1136 1149 1207 1208 1274 1189 1193 1193 1217 1254 1260 1241 1264 1313 1320 1307 1309
Outpatient and OTP Active Clients by Month
Outpatient
NTP
IOT Active Clients by Month
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
Feb-17 Mar-17 Apr-17 May-17 Jun-17 Jul-17 Aug-17 Sep-17 Oct-17 Nov-17 Dec-17 Jan-18 Feb-18 Mar-18 Apr-18 May-18 Jun-18
IOT 198 214 197 234 212 231 255 228 259 229 247 260 249 245 242 254 230
IOT Active Clients by Month
Total ASAMs completed by
SU CARES and CCT Teams
Program ASAM Count
Desert CCT 3362CCT 351
Riverside CCT 3361CCT 202
START Desert 002148 42
START Mid-County 00214M Term 5/1/16 1
START Riverside 002147 381
SU CARES 214201 4372
Grand Total 5349
6%4%
1%
0%
7%
82%
Total ASAMs Completed
Desert CCT 3362CCT
Riverside CCT 3361CCT
START Desert 002148
START Mid-County00214M Term 5/1/16
START Riverside 002147
SU CARES 214201
Level of Care Count
LOC Matched 15379
LOC Did not Match 1064
Total 16443
ASAMs matching LOC
94%
6%
ASAM Level of Care
LOC Matched
LOC Did not Match
Performance Improvement Plan
# Describe Performance Indicator Numerator
Denominator
Baseline for Performance
Indicator (number)
Goal
(number)
1 Number of days from a Withdrawal management discharge to another
treatment modality
Number and % of WM episodes transitioning to another level of
care within 14 days of discharge.
Total Number of WM
episodes
FY16/17 Q1-75/175=42.8% Q2-66/153=43.1%
Increase 17 percentage points
from 43% to 60%
2 Number of days from a residential discharge to another treatment modality.
Number and % of Residential episodes transitioning to an
outpatient level of care within
14 days of discharge.
Total number of Residential
episodes
FY16/17 Q1-95/535=17.7% Q2-105/502=20.9%
Increase 20 percentage points
from 20% to 40%
3 Percentage of consumers re-admitted to Residential care or withdrawal management
within 16 to 90 and 16 to 180 days of a
residential discharge.
Number of Residential discharges with a re-admission within 16 to
90 days and 16 to 180 days of
discharge.
Total number of residential
episodes
90 Day-4.63% 180 Day-7.6%
Decrease to 3%
Results from Year 1
Indicator Baseline Goal Result
% of clients that successfully
transitioned from 3.2WM to
either outpatient or residential
LOC within 14 days of discharge
43% 17% increase Q4 FY16/17 = 66.9%
(55% increase)
Q2 FY17/18 = 64.9%
(51% increase)
% of clients transitioning from
Residential to an outpatient
level of care within 14 days of
discharge from Residential
20.9% 19.1% increase Q4 FY16/17 = 15.4%
(26% decrease)
Q2 FY17/18 = 20.0%
(4.3% decrease)
Number of residential
discharges with a re-admission
within 16-90 days and within
16-180- days
90 day = 4.63%
180 day = 7.6%
Decrease to 3% Q2 FY 17/18
90 day = 3.21%
(30.2% decrease)
180 day = 4.86%
(36.1% decrease)
Next Steps
Service Expansion
• Plans to release new RFP for Service Providers before
end of year 2018 for services to begin for FY 19/20
• Looking to potentially expand services to include the
following additional levels of care
– Level 2.5 – Partial Hospitalization
– Levels 1.0-WM and 2.0-WM
– Levels 3.7-WM and 4.0-WM
Additional Steps
• Analyze outcomes
• Analyze Referral Sources and trends
• Analyze PIP’s and Data to make system changes
Questions???
Contact Information
Rhyan A. Miller [email protected]
William W. Harris [email protected]
Elizabeth M. Del Rio [email protected]
Riverside University Health System – Behavioral Health
Substance Abuse Prevention & Treatment
3525 Presley Ave.
Riverside, CA 92507
(951) 782-2410